Thursday, 28 July 2016

There is little doubt that we live in interesting and many
would say, troubled, times. Across the globe we’re seeing more terrorist
attacks, or at least more reported ones, spanning a spectrum of isolated individuals
with mental health issues to highly planned attack by an extremist group. Then
we have the Americans nominating Donald Trump as a presidential candidate and the
British voting to leave the EU: neither of which were in any way predicted 12
months ago. What’s going on! Are these developments, puzzling and worrying to
many, a sign of some underlying trend, a Zeitgeist?

If so, it’s not the only one.

Since probably the 1980s, the Reagan/Thatcher era, we’ve had
the Zeitgeist of personal ambition, or going for and getting whatever you can
get. And that’s applied at the level of individual, corporation and nation.

Since the 1960s there’s been the ‘alternative’ Zeitgeist, closely
linked to the peace movement: all sorts of campaigns against war, exploitation
and over-commercialisation.

One facet of the above, the ‘anti-establishment’ Zeitgeist,
may underlie the Trump bandwagon, the UK rebellion against the EU and a rise of
far-right, fascist or nationalistic parties across Europe. Many folks are just
fed up of being told what to do by career politicians and bureaucrats who are out-of-touch with
how ordinary folks are feeling.

And it’s not just establishment politicians who are feeling
the brunt of popular back-lash. In the UK at least, high profile corporate scandals
(e.g. the failure of BHS and ethics of Sports Direct) are highlighting the need
for a better moral compass in all walks of life.

Perhaps underlying all of this is a ‘we’ve had enough’
Zeitgeist: a coming together of the desire for personal freedom with the
realisation that many of those we’ve been trusting to run our business and governments
actually don’t have our interests at heart . ..because they no longer have a heart!

After decades of society being dominated by the belief that
humans, or rather a few powerful ones, can control everything (from financial
stability to the world food production) and that this will mean health and happiness
for all of us, the truth is beginning to dawn: money, power, technology are
merely tools. It’s the intent behind them that matters. And, what we all need
is to feel valued, to feel that those in charge care about us.

All that’s going on in the world today, with the worst aspects
of human behaviour hitting our screen and streets are no more and no less than
the results of how we’ve been living and thinking over recent decades. They are
a wake-up call. Yes, this dis-order and unhappiness is the current Zeitgeist,
but it need only be temporary phase.

If we heed the underlying message, if we respond to the real
needs that have triggered all these worrying developments, then a very
different Zeitgeist can and will be enabled: let’s call it the Zeitgeist of and
for ‘decent human beings’, the restoration of balance between those in power
and the rest, the restoration of balance between how we think and how we feel.

Some call it Emotional Intelligence, some call it conscious
evolution, but those who understand it best know that it’s something, like any
true Zeitgeist, that cannot be put into words: it’s no more and no less than
the irrepressible human spirit reasserting itself.

The more we acknowledge it, the more the Zeitgeist will
build. The more committed we all are to balancing our heads, heart and hands,
the sooner we create a balanced, harmonious society.

At times it won’t be easy. I can see and admit how spoilt the
‘personal ambition’ Zeitgeist has encouraged me to become. I’ve become aware of
how easy I like things to be. But I’ve also seen that progress comes not by
trying to control things or other people, but by taking the time and effort to
understand other perspectives and by finding empathy and compassion for those
who, for whatever reason, are different from me. The emerging Zeitgeist is of ‘one
humanity’. Not just a global economy and ecosystem, but a genuine, practical,
recognition that we are all in this together. In order not just to prosper but
to survive, we have to recognise our common humanity and remind ourselves what
that means: we are all thinking, feeling, human beings.

About Me

I see education as far more than the teaching of facts & theories: it needs to inspire and enable students, at all ages and in all subjects, to find their niche in life.
To be both effective and enjoyable any form of teaching or learning has to recognise humans as thinking and feeling beings.
I see my role as enabling your true, inner sense of self and helping you fulfill your real, deeper needs. Without this intent, what IS the point!?